COLOMBO (AFP) – Flying shrapnel triggered by explosions at an ammunition depot on the edge of Sri Lanka’s capital destroyed a hospital and hundreds of homes, sending thousands scrambling for cover, authorities said Monday (June 6).

At least one soldier burnt to death in the worst ammunition depot fire in Sri Lanka’s history and nearly 50 people were treated for injuries or smoke inhalation, Colombo medical chief Palitha Mahipala said.

The fire was extinguished around 12 hours after it started on Sunday evening at the Salawa military complex, setting off explosions that went on through the night.

“The fire has been put out, but still there are intermittent explosions,” army spokesman Jayanath Jayaweera told AFP. “That is why we are asking residents to keep away.”

Thousands of people living near the site were ordered to leave their homes and move to schools and temples. “The Salawa hospital was evacuated soon after the fire and this morning we found that the hospital has been badly damaged,” a police officer at the scene told AFP. “Fortunately, all the patients there were taken out in time.”

Government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne said the national security council would meet on Monday to review the blast. “This is a military matter and they must investigate if this was an accident or sabotage,” said Senaratne.

The army stored heavy weaponry and ammunition, including rockets, at the sprawling Salawa camp located at a former plywood factory about 36km east of Colombo.

Pretty chaotic scenes on the road towards Kosgama. I am estimating that thousands are evacuating... https://t.co/gUgNLOnqYC

“Pretty chaotic scenes on the road,” Sri Lanka’s Deputy Foreign Minister Harsha de Silva, who was travelling in the area, had said on Twitter. “I am estimating that thousands are evacuating.”

Businessman Neville Nishantha, 44, said he fled with his wife and three children as the explosions began and returned on Monday morning to see his house in ruins.

“A mortar bomb had gone through my roof and hit the living room,” Nishantha told AFP. “A wall collapsed in the bedroom where my three children would have slept.”

“We are lucky to have escaped. All of us started running as the explosions began.” Wasantha Fernando, 45, said he abandoned his home and ran as thick black smoke filled the area.

“When I got back this morning the entire place was covered in ash,” he said, adding that his walls had cracked and the house was unstable.

Law and Order Minister Sagala Ratnayake said the police Criminal Investigation Department had been asked to look into the cause of the explosions.

“Our priority is to save lives,” Ratnayake told reporters. “But we have already asked the CID to investigate.”

He said the fire had spread quickly to two ammunition depots within the military complex and emergency responders struggled to extinguish it because they could not reach the source.

Colombo health chief Palitha Mahipala said all hospitals were on red alert, and 35 ambulances were dispatched to help people affected by the heavy smoke. Officials declared Monday a holiday for nearby schools and government offices.

The explosion was the worst at a military installation since the end of Sri Lanka’s decades-long Tamil separatist war in May 2009.

In June 2009, there was a similar, but a much less intense explosion at an army ammunition storage facility in the northern district of Vavuniya, 250 kilometres north of Colombo, leaving several soldiers injured.

Government forces crushed Tamil Tiger rebels in a no-holds-barred military campaign that also triggered allegations of up to 40,000 ethnic Tamil civilians being killed in government bombardments.

The Straits Times

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